'7: gs aHies and of A&M’ S Kohiman un d Koh|. l»acks tackles. le Cub of. did. As main Pisf, be at de- inebacker, :s Probed time The Battalion Volume 60 COLLEGE STATION, TEXAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1961 Number 23 Arts And Sciences Be Largest Gen. Short! Here Tonight Sweetheart Reviews Parade Aggie Sweetheart Ann Edwards acknowl- urday morning. With Miss Edwards is edges an “eyes right” during the Corps Trip Corps Commander Bill Cardwell. (Photo by parade through downtown Fort Worth Sat- Johnny Herrin) ()UICKL Y EXTINGUISHED Electrical Fire Hazes Firemen A small electrical fire in A 12 B i ^ ra b6ed ai\, extinguisher, and put 'ollege View sent a bevy of three out the fire, which wasn’t very hlly-equipped fire trucks to the me Sunday night after it was (ported about 7:30 p.m. Cause of the fire was a faulty tall plug, according to Don Fletcher, resident of the apart- sent. "I was in my study room, clean- itp off my desk, when the plug Ported out and threw out all the Ifhts. I checked the wall switch, iad then unplugged all cords in Sie apartment except the faulty fie; I missed it. “Then, I went downstairs to deck the switch, and my wife fame running out of the apart- lent yelling that the room was it fife! “I threw off the switch, then Silver Taps Held Monday For Hall,’65 Silver Taps was held last night fcr Robert Wyatt Hall, ’65 archi- Wure major from Fort Worth, »lo was killed early Saturday Sorning between Fort Worth and Denton. Hall, 17, died of injuries sus- kined when his car overturned on IS. Highway 377 near Roanoke. He had been in Denton for a dance Texas Woman’s University. Three other Aggies with Hall offered minor cuts and bruises in tie accident. They were Hobart Johnson, ’65 from Glenview, 111.; Joe Becker, ’65 from Houston, and am Haney, ’65 from Beau mont. Hall’s father, Dr. Wyatt M. Hall uid after the accident he believed lis son had fallen asleep at the 'heel. Funeral services for the Com pany B-l freshman was held yes terday in Fort Worth. large; the plug had caught a box of old papers on fire. “After it was out, someone downstairs decided they better call the fire department, and a few minutes later, there were oodles of firemen all over the place. “An electrician also showed up, and checked the plug wires; they had burned about a foot into the wall, but no real damage was done.” Fletcher said everything was re paired yesterday by noon. 5A&M Ag Staffers Attend Beef Course Five members of the School of Agriculture attended the recent Beef Management Short Course in Odessa and Alpine. Cliff Bates, Tom Prather, Ed bacek, L. A. Maddox and Garlyn Hoffman were the delegates. NSF Awards Grant Here On Frog Research The National Science Founda tion has awarded Doug Robinson, graduate student in the Depart ment of Wildlife Management, a two year grant to study frogs be longing to the family Leptodacty- lidae. Dr. Richard J. Baldauf, associ ate professor in the department, is chief investigator on the proj ect. Robinson, who is working on his doctorate, will focus his studies on the cranial anatomy of the frogs. Baldauf said the project is im portant because the amphibians have served as the revolutionary stepping stones from water to land in the development of air-breath ing animals. Kyle Field To Bar All But Students, Dates In Section Only students with activity cards and their dates will be al lowed In the student section at fu ture home games, Put Dial, busi ness manager in the athletic of fice, said today. In the past persons with gen eral admission tickets have also been sitting in the student sec tion, he said. The move has been necessitated by increased crowding in the stu dent section, especially in the sen ior section. One of the West’s outstanding military leaders, Maj. Gen. Arthur C. Shortt, will speak on campus tonight under the auspices of the Department of History and Gov ernment. The 8 p.m. address in the Me morial Student Center Ballroom wdll be entitled “The Nature of the Cold War.” Assisting the Department of History and Government in bring ing Gen. Shortt to campus is the British Consul-General in Hous ton. Vice Consul A. V. Hayday will accompany the general. J. M. Nance, Head of the De partment of History and Govern ment, said Gen. Shortt’s range of experience and responsibility make him an authority on the lecture subject. The speaker, immediately before joining the British Infor mation Service, was director of British Military Intelligence and subsequently director of public re lations at the War Office. Commissioned in the Royal En gineers in 1916 at the age of 17, he fought with the 36th Ulster Di vision in the Ypres Salient, 1917; served with the Royal Engineers in India after the war until 1922; assisted in surveying the Gold Coast (now Ghana); graduated from Senior Staff College at Min- ley Manor, 1939; seiwed as staff officer, 1st Division, British Ex peditionary Force, World War II, under Gen. Alexander, and spent four days on the Dunkirk beaches; directed technical training, British War Office, 1943-44; went to France in 1944 as commander of the newly formed Army Group Royal Engineer Formations and fought with the Canadian Army AIME To Hear Drilling Lecture The student AIME chapter and advanced drilling engineering stu dents will hear J. E. Brantly, a distinguished lecturer of the So ciety of Petroleum Engineers, speak tonight. Deadline Friday For Degree Applicants Students planning to receive de grees in January, 1962, must file their applications for degrees be fore Friday, according to H. L. Heaton, director of admissions and registrar. Advanced degree candidates must file applications with both the Registrar’s and the Graduate Dean’s office by Friday. Health Officials Note TB In Bryan Schools Two positive reactions have been found among the 376 school chil dren who have been tested in the tuberculin testing program in Bry an schools. Positive reactions indicate the child has been in contact with someone who has tuberculosis, but it does not tell whether the germs are actively working, Mary Mar tha Collen, health unit TB nurse, pointed out. The testing project, which is continuing this week, is sponsored by the Brazos County TB Associa tion health unit and the Bryan schools. Christmas Seal Campaign funds help pay for the program. Thirty thousand sheets of Christmas Seals to be used in this year’s campaign have been deliv ered to the TB Association office, according to Mrs. Hickman Gar rett Jr., campaign chairman. The seals with appeal letters will be readied for mailing to Brazos County residents by volun teers working from now until Nov. 13, the campaign’s opening date. Brantly’s address, scheduled at 7:30 in the Petroleum Engineering Building, will be on improvements in the drilling industry. Brantly is a founder of Drilling and Exploration Co., Inc., of Dal las, and a recipient of the Ameri can Institute of Mining, Metallur gical and Petroleum Engineers’ Anthony F. Lucas Gold Medal in 1957. After graduation from the Uni versity of Alabama in 1915, he served as assistant state geologist of Georgia. From 1921 through 1928, he was chief foreign geolo gist for the Atlantic Refining Co. In 1929, he founded Drilling and Exploration Co. Following his re tirement in 1952, he became assist ant deputy administrator of the Petroleum Administration for De fense for one year. The society of Petroleum Engi neers is a constituent society of the AIME. This is the second year the society has sponsored a “Dis tinguished Lecturer Program,” adding three more lecturers. Who’s Who Box Tampered With Who’s Who nominations made before last Friday will have to be made again. Selection Com mittee Chairman J Wayne Stark said today. All applications made before last Friday were destroyed when the application box was entered, apparently maliciously. Stark said. under Gen. Simonds in the battle of Falaise Gap, which climaxed the Normandy campaign. At war’s end, Gen. Shortt was sent to Ankara as fortifications advisor, a job studying the stra tegic defense of Turkey. There after, he spent three years as mil itary attache in Athens, a period covering most of the civil war. He traveled throughout Greece and worked closely with the British Mission and later with the Ameri can Mission, commanded by Gen. Van Fleet. Miss Jeffrey Rejoins A&M Research Staff Miss Lela Mae Jeffrey, one of the nation’s best known woman oceanographers, has rejoined the chemical oceanography section of the Department of Oceanography and Meteorology after four years in the petroleum industry. Now that she has returned, she will be concerned with the study of organic sea materials, Dr. Dale F, Leipper, Head of the Depart ment of Oceanography and Me teorology, said today. Miss Jeffrey was previously as sociated with the department from 1951 through March, 1958. In 1954 she served as a research par ticipant at the Oak Ridge Insti tute of Nuclear Studies. Known there as the South’s only woman oceanographer, her work was concerned with new methods involving uranium and radiation equipment for measuring the age and origin of sea deposits. She received her bachelor’s de degree in physics from the Univer sity of Texas and master’s degrees in physiology and oceanography from Texas and the Scripps Insti tution of Oceanography. Her research experience includes two years at the University’s In stitute of Marine Science, Port Aransas, and experience with the Southwest Research Institute as a marine biologist. Prior to returning to A&M, Miss Jeffrey was assistant director of the Petroleum Information Serv ice at the University of Tulsa. She is a member of the Sigma Xi, graduate research society, the American Chemical Society, the American Geophysical Union and a number of honor societies. Dallas Man To Address Aggie Group The regional manager of j»the North Texas Area, Texas Manu facturers Association, will speak tonight at a 7:30 .meeting of the A&M chapter of the Texas Society of Professional Engineers in the Chemistry Building. He is Jim Stewart, a native and resident of Dallas. Stewart assumed his present po sition after serving as manager of the White Rock Chamber of Com merce, assistant general manager of the North Dallas Chamber of Commerce, manager of the Gar land Chamber of Commerce and reporter and news editor of the Garland Daily News. He is a graduate of Southern Methodist University and two schools for Chamber of Commerce executives. School Dean Sees Growth By ’64 The School of Arts and Sciences, the youngest degree granting school on campus, may be the school’s largest with in two years, Dean Frank W. R. Hubert predicted yesterday to a Century Study group. Hubert said enrollment trends in the past 15 years in dicate the School of Arts and Sciences will have the largest enrollment of the college’s four degree-granting schools by 1964. For the past 15 years the School of Arts and Sciences has been the fastest-growing school on the campus. Enroll ment of students majoring in arts and sciences has increased from 13 per cent of the total college enrollment in 1945 to 37 per cent this year. Figures released this week by Registrar H. L. Heaton show 2,825 students enrolled for major studies in arts and sciences. That is 37 per cent of the 1961 fall enrollment of 7,734. The School of Engineering, the college’s largest degree-granting school, enrolled 3,051, or 39 per cent. The School of Agriculture enrolled 1,286, or 17 per cent. And the School of Veterinary Medicine, which has a controlled enrollment, signed up 572, or seven per cent. In the School of Arts and Sci ences are the Division of Business Administration and the depart ments of biology, chemistry, eco nomics, education and psychology, English, geography, health and physical education, history and government, journalism, mathe matics, modem languages, oceano graphy and meteorology, physics and religious education. In addition to offering complete programs in these areas of in struction, the School of Arts and Sciences also handle instruction in the basic sciences, mathematics, socia,! sciences and the humanites for the schools of agriculture, en gineering and veterinary medicine. Two-thirds of the total instruc tion taking place on campus was carried out in the School of Arts and Sciences during the 1660-61 school year. Hubert pointed out that growth in the School of Arts and Sciences has been about equally divided be tween the major classifications of students—namely, liberal arts, sci ences and business administration. Newton Named School Group Officer-Elect John W. Newton, vice-president of the board of directors of the A&M College System, has been named president-elect of the na tional Association of Governing Boards of State Universities and Allied Institutions. He was elected at the recent an nual meeting of the national as sociation, at Lincoln, Nebraska. He has been a member of the as sociation’s executive committee for the past year. Newton is president of the Nor- vel Wilder Supply Co., Beaumont, and was formerly vice president and general manager of Magnolia Peti’oleum Refining Co., until his retirement from that post. A na tive of Bryan, Newton is a 1912 graduate of A&M. Long a leader in the support of higher education in Texas, New ton served on the board of direc tors of the system from 1944 to 1950 and was reappointed in 1959 to his present term. He also has served as a member of the Texas Commission on Higher Education. Sweetheart Presented Cadet Corps Commander Bill Cardwell places the tradi tional kiss on 1961-62 Aggie Sweetheart Ann Edwards during halftime sweetheart presentation ceremonies at the A&M-TCU football game in Fort Worth Saturday. Civilian Student Council President Doug Schwenk looks on. Details of the 15-14 loss for the Ags is on page 4. (Photo by Johnny Herrin)